The Sun (Malaysia)

Company upcycles second-hand clothes into holiday gifts

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A PIONEER of zero waste in fashion, Daniel Silverstei­n – the designer behind the Zero Waste Daniel brand – is pushing the limits of upcycling with a collection of more than a thousand items made entirely from unsaleable clothing. The initiative has given a second life to nearly a ton of clothing and accessorie­s that would otherwise have ended up in the trash.

Transformi­ng public transport seat textiles into shoes, socks into crop tops, or broken umbrellas into jackets and accessorie­s has become commonplac­e in fashion.

Although these amazing collection­s are certainly not enough to fight against the overproduc­tion that stems from one of the world’s most polluting industries, they’re still taking a stand and raising public awareness of the mountains of waste that the sector generates each year. Zero Waste Daniel is a brand which, as its name suggests, has zero waste in its DNA. It is now going even further by transformi­ng no less than 900kg of clothing into a collection of holiday gifts, called the “Full Circle Collection.”

These new kinds of holiday gifts are the result of a partnershi­p with thredUP, a specialist in second-hand clothing, which sent nearly a ton of unsaleable clothes to Zero Waste Daniel to prevent them from ending up in landfill, or even worse, in the natural environmen­t.

In total, more than 1,000 items of all kinds – garments, home decor, accessorie­s, tableware and pet products – have been created from this mountain of waste. The initiative proves once again that waste and other objects destined to be thrown away, or forgotten, do have a future in an industry that’s trying – and must – reduce its impact on the planet.

“My goal was to have almost nothing left over, which is a tall order for such a large-scale collection ... I’ve been an independen­t designer for over a decade, and no one in the fashion industry has been the perfect partner yet. They want higher quality, more creative, faster, cheaper – those things don’t really work together,” explains the designer behind Zero Waste Daniel. He continues: “I wanted to take something nobody wants, and turn it into things that not just someone wants, but maybe everyone wants.”

Available from Nov 15 online, the collection includes – you guessed it – only items made from second-hand clothes that could not be sold on thredUP.

It includes items as diverse as denim bowls, pet beds, shoulder bags, coats, pillows, hats, coasters, napkins, scrunchies, scarves, and other apparel that will (inevitably) find takers this holiday season.

 ?? INSTAGRAM ?? Zero Waste Daniel turned some 900kg of clothing into holiday gifts. –
INSTAGRAM Zero Waste Daniel turned some 900kg of clothing into holiday gifts. –

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